On Monday, Greater Than Or Equal To is starting a new project, called Detainee 063. It is going to republish the interrogation log of Mohammed Al-Qahtani, in real time.
The log covers a fifty-day stretch of Al-Qahtani’s interrogation at Guantanamo Bay (where he was, and still is, being held on suspicion of terrorism) from 23 November 2002 to 11 January 2003. Each entry will appear on the website exactly seven years after it was first recorded.
For the fifty days of the log, Detainee 063 is questioned by teams of interrogators working in shifts, typically for twenty hours a day. Often the log is brutal and unpleasant to read. Often it is almost banal – detailing the quotidian, humdrum schedule by which the interrogators mean to apply unbearable pressure to a person’s will.
Within the first hour on Monday, Detainee 063 will refuse water, a tactic that he will come to repeat often. As the days and weeks go on, sometimes an IV drip will be forcibly administered to ensure that he remains well enough to continue. On one occasion, when he has been handcuffed to his seat to prevent him interfering with the IV, he will bite through the tube running into his body. He will be put in a booth covered with images of 9/11 victims. Images of victims will be taped to his clothes. His head and beard will be shaved and female interrogators will be used to cause him discomfort. He will be made to act as a dog, being taught to stay, come and bark. His hands and feet will swell. His heart rate will slow to 35 bpm.
Detainee 063 is meant as a kind of re-enactment. It will use the internet (as well as the site itself, an RSS feed and a Twitter account will be updated) as a means to dramatize torture as it is practiced but not often talked about: not with techniques used in isolation, but the cumulative effect of mistreatment over a prolonged period. I don’t expect many to read it in its entirety but I hope that following it, even for a few days, that being made aware of the passing of time between entries in the log, will make any visitors to the site more aware of the relentlessness of this interrogation, and of relentlessness as an aspect of torture.
On January 22, 2009, two days after assuming office, Barack Obama issued an executive order that the detention centre at Guantanamo Bay be shut down within a year. By the time the last entry of Al-Qahtani’s interrogation log is published at Detainee 063, that deadline will almost have arrived.
Update, 23 November: Detainee 063 is up and running. I posted an explanation of the project (similar to this post) at the Detainee 063 blog.